During the 1950s and 1960s, four different publishers put out comic books containing Peanuts material. To celebrate the release of the new Peanuts Dell Archive (order it!), the AAUGH Blogger discusses the history of these comics and what they were like.

SIMILAR NEWS

The last Peanutsy place for me to cover from my Japan trip is Snoopy Town Shop, a chain of Peanuts merchandise stores. I stopped by one on the top store of a mall in Kyoto. They carried an array of items, but nothing too surprising – apparel, phone cases, toiletries, figures, …

I’m still recovering from the cold that I picked up in Japan (which luckily didn’t strike fully until I was back), but here are a few stray things that I saw while there. A vending machine of Snoopy charms. (There were also similar “Gacha capsule” machines with three Snoopy figures.) …

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Disclaimers

AAUGH.com is funded by a combination of referral links, primarily to Amazon.com (which means that when you click through on a link from here and then buy something, the AAUGH Blogger gets paid a cut) and by advertising, most of which we do not control. The AAUGH Blogger strives for fair reviews, occasionally gets review copies (and has never sold them), and tends to talk about himself in the third person, yes he does.
The AAUGH Blogger has or has had business relationships with the following producers of Peanuts books:

Boom! Studios (Kaboom), in regard to the Peanuts comic books and the trade paperback collections thereof

IDW, in matters unrelated to their Peanuts books

Packager becker&mayer!, in regards to such works as The Peanuts Collection, published by Little Brown and other publishers, Classic Peanuts: Great Moments, published by Sterling Innovation, and The Snoopy Treasures, published by Thunder Bay Press

The AAUGH Blogger is the publisher of About Comics, and as part of that line publishes various Schulz-related books.